All boyish whimwhams
and mad bacchanalia, the false writings that have been brought forth against
the venerable icons, must be turned in to the Bishopric of Constantinople to be
put away together with the rest of heretical books. If, on the other hand,
anyone should be found hiding these, if he be a Bishop, a Presbyter, or a
Deacon, let him be deposed from office; but if he be a layman or a monk, let
him be excommunicated.

(Ap. c. LX; cc. II and LXIII of the 6th; c.
LI of Laodicea.)

Interpretation.

The present Canon decrees that all the false
writings which the iconomachists composed against the holy icons and which are
flimsy as children’s toys, and as crazy as the raving and insane bacchantes —
those women who used to dance drunken at the festival of the tutelar of intoxication
Dionysus — all those writings, I say, must be surrendered to the Patriarchate
of Constantinople, to be put together with the other books by heretics — in
such a place, that is to say, that no one will ever be able to take them
therefrom with a view to reading them. As for anyone who should hide them, with
a view to reading them himself or providing them for others to read, if he be a
bishop, a presbyter, or a deacon, let him be deposed from office; but if he be
a layman or a monk, let him be excommunicated. See also Ap. c. LX.